PDF pages/forms on the AFRMA site requires Adobe Acrobat Reader.
If you don’t have it, click HERE

This story is from the WSSF 2005AFRMA Rat & Mouse Tales news-magazine.

Milton Remembers

By Buhnne Tramutola

Illustrations by Sarah Cameron

Twas the night before Christmas and all through the house . . . was something
stirring? Could it be a mouse?

Tired from decorating the beautiful fresh Christmas tree, Marylynn
plopped into the luxury of the new recliner, closed her eyes . . .
“just for a minute” . . . and dozed off immediately.

Marylynn dreamt in vivid colored action . . . visions of Milton the
field mouse who was fully clothed—tight long pants of gleaming
white (to blend in with the snowy December world) with shirt top a
pale yellow and well fitted white jacket. Also, that cute little baseball
cap on backwards. Very stylish and cute. A tricky white bow tie and
comfy moccasin shoes.

In Spring, Summer, or Fall his colorful outfits would change to blend
in with the meadow”s colors. But this was a snowy winter, and
he was on his way to visit his Church Mouse cousin. Milton wanted
to make a good impression as he had never visited a church before
or his cousin.

Marylynn dreamt Milton the mouse was standing on his back legs, walking
just like a person and jumping up, from stair step to stair step until
he was out of sight upstairs. Poor Milton had lost his way. This
was not a church!

Marylynn was slightly aware that Benny her beagle hound had scampered,
with doggie toenails clicking and sliding in his haste across the
slippery floor, arriving up stairs just as Milton the mouse ducked
under the bed to hide.

Oh my, it certainly was funny under this bed—dusty! Milton could
hardly breathe, but there was a slit in the underside of the covered
box-spring. Up the bedstead leg and into that slit went Milton the
Mouse. Wow—sure was darker in here, but at least that panting
dog could not see him. Smell maybe. Milton wished he could escape
back to the meadows and get out of his silly clothes.

Milton had dressed just to visit and impress Cousin Chuck the Church
Mouse. But this—what a predicament! This was certainly not a
church, nor Cousin Church Mouse to greet him. Oh, to just get back
to the meadow. That dog, now barking and jumping all over the bed.
The bed was too low for the dog to go under, but the mouse scent certainly
was under this bed. The springs squeaked as the dog continuously jumped
to floor and back again. Soon, most of the covers were half on the floor.

Marylynn hurried up the stairs to see what Benny”s loud barking
was about and was shocked at the sight of the disheveled bedcovers.

Benny! What are you doing? Then she led the unwilling
dog to put him out in the fenced-in yard; came back upstairs to remake
the bed, musing unintelligible sounds all the while.

Poor Milton the Mouse, just shivered with fear in his hiding place
in the box spring. (Milton thought of the time he ventured into the
goat barn where cats with their big yellow eyes lived. Well, he was
not dressed in these silly clothes and had made a hasty retreat before
any of the cats had smelled or spotted him.)

His beautiful white clothing was catching on everything; it was so
crowded with all those springs. Now he was determined to get rid of
the cumbersome clothes, then flee back to his comfy meadow.

Darkness came to the house where Milton the Mouse was hiding. All was quiet!

Leaving all his clothing in a heap on the floor, he, oh so carefully,
slunk down the stairs, peeked around the comer, snuck into the kitchen
to hide there to catch his breath while shaking with fear of that
dog sleeping in the living room. Milton snuck to the drafty gap under
the door, to the screen door whence he had entered the house. The
hole in the bottom corner of the screen had been small, but Milton
had entered through it, his fat little body enlarging the hole somewhat
with the stretched wires pointing inward; Milton would have to push
against them to get back out . . . . This was going to hurt! But how
else to get out? Sharp wires poked his tender skin as he squeezed
out that hole. Bleeding in places, he was outside of that horrible house.

He sought the tunnels in the meadow grass to find his home and his
bedroom. After licking his wounds, he went directly to bed without
speaking to other mice.

Next morning Marylynn was perplexed when she picked up the tiny white
garments lying in a heap beside the bedstead leg. She noticed a small
tear in the tiny trousers.

Marylynn was puzzled. That dream of a clothed mouse walking on two
hind legs, then hopping up the stairs was confusing, even impossible!
But what were these tiny garments? Anything was possible
with the magic of Christmas. If Santa could come down the chimney
and reindeer could fly? Well?

Could field mice wear cute little clothing?

Benny the Beagle dog sniffed at the mouse odor on the tiny clothes
and promptly went into a barking frenzy . . . .